http://www.gcn.com/online/vol1_no1/46398-1.html By William Jackson GCN.com 06/05/08 The National Institute of Standards and Technology is developing a system of standardized measurements to evaluate the impact of security configurations on operating systems and applications. "Each security configuration decision can have positive and negative effects of varying degrees to the security of a host," NIST's draft document states. "Without a standardized way to quantify these effects, organizations cannot easily make sound decisions as to how each security issue should be addressed, nor can they quantitatively determine the overall security strength or weakness for a host." The draft [1] of "Interagency Report 7502: The Common Configuration Scoring System" has been released for public comment. The report proposes a set of measures for security configuration issues and a formula to combine those measures into scores for each issue, collectively called the Common Configuration Scoring System (CCSS). It is derived from the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) for measuring the relative severity of vulnerabilities caused by software flaws. CCSS adjusts the basic components of CVSS to focus on security configuration issues rather than software flaws. Initially, CCSS addresses only configuration issues that are constant over time and environments. It deals with how readily a weakness could be exploited and how exploitation could affect hosts. Those characteristics are base metrics, and they are the inputs into the equation that calculates a base score. NIST plans to expand CCSS to include environmental metrics, which represent characteristics unique to a particular environment. Comments on the draft of CCSS should be e-mailed by July 3 to IR7502comments (at) nist.gov with "Comments IR 7502" in the subject line. [1] http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/drafts/nistir-7502/Draft-NISTIR-7502.pdf _______________________________________________ Attend Black Hat USA, August 2-7 in Las Vegas, the world's premier technical event for ICT security experts. Featuring 40 hands-on training courses and 80 Briefings presentations with lots of new content and new tools. Network with 4,000 delegates from 50 nations. Visit product displays by 30 top sponsors in a relaxed setting. http://www.blackhat.com
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